© Cark R, Sams II, Dembinsky Photo Associates

Wildlife Habitat

The Conservation Fund works with private and public partners to protect areas rich in wildlife habitat – our nation’s forestlands, river corridors, wetlands, and grasslands. These landscapes of life connect individuals and communities to the land and forge a greater commitment for the preservation of our great outdoors.

Green Mountain Bear Corridor: Safer Passage for Vermont's Black Bears

The final piece in the 20,000-acre, 28-parcel Green Mountain Corridor was secured in 2006, completing a 12-year initiative led by the Fund and its partners.  Read more>

Mispillion Harbor: Protecting a Haven for Red Knots

The Conservation Fund protected approximately one mile of shoreline at Mispillion Harbor - an area that is critical to the imperiled red knot bird species.  Read more>

Rocky Mountain Front Initiative: Grizzlies on the Front

Where Montana’s dramatic peaks give way to the Northern Great Plains, the Rocky Mountain Front forms a landscape unlike any other in America. The Front represents some of the nation’s rarest wildlife habitat – where grizzly bears still roam freely from the mountains to the plains, as they have for centuries.   Read more>

Southwest Alaska Salmon Habitat Initiative

The Conservation Fund’s Southwest Alaska Salmon Habitat Initiative, the largest land protection project of its kind, offers an exciting opportunity to help conserve one of the greatest natural landscapes in North America.   Read more>
Spotlight: Garcia River Forest

Garcia River ForestThe Garcia River Forest – a Conservation Fund-owned forest on California’s North Coast – became one of the first forests – and the largest – recognized by the California Climate Action Registry as a certified source of carbon credits.
Read more »

In Your Words

In Your Words

Pledge to our Donors
Your charitable dollars are limited -- we make every dollar count. We pledge to:

Donor Committment

  • Safeguard privacy
  • Exceed industry standards
  • Limit mailings
  • Ensure gifts directly support conservation